| Ruling: TJX No Longer a Federal Case
The largest credit card data breach in history is now a matter for a Massachussetts court.The worst credit card data breach in history is a federal case no more. A federal judge overseeing the TJX cases in effect fired himself as TJX judge on Tuesday, and ordered the case out of federal court and into Massachusetts state court. U.S. District Court Judge William Young also praised Visa as a "hero" because it conducted its own investigation and worked out a settlement with a class of plaintiffs. "I find this very significant, [that] theyve worked out a settlement with an opt-in class. Opt-in classes are very desirable," the judge said from the bench. The judge was referring to an agreement that Visa worked out with TJX where TJX would directly pay some of the plaintiffs banks.
Nice income but not much credit history
Dear Liz: My husband and I decided to start using a second airline frequent-flier program and applied for its credit card. I was turned down on the grounds of "few revolving accounts opened long enough to establish credit history" and "not enough accounts opened long enough to establish a credit history." My husband then applied for the same card, with the same response. We have an annual income above $170,000, we own a $750,000 home outright and have investments of $1.5 million. We have no debts and we've had the one credit card we use (a MasterCard) for 15 years. We always pay the bill in full every month, and we have never been anywhere near the $25,000 credit limit. Our FICO scores are about 750. .
Housing tilting economy down
It's not a pretty picture, and it didn't have to come to this. The worst housing slump since World War II is showing no sign of abating. Manufacturing activity is hinting at recession. Employment is weakening. The Standard & Poor's 500 has dropped about 4 percent during the last week. The mistakes banks and brokers made with mortgage-related bonds have left a lingering credit crunch, or a reluctance by lenders to make affordable loans to consumers and businesses. Investors have gone into the new year with a dreary attitude, and Wall Street analysts are warning investors to be careful. .
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